Intel, Celeron, EtherExpress, i386, i486, Itanium, Pentium, and Xeon are trademarks or
registered trademarks of Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries in the United States and
other countries.

SPARC, SPARC64, SPARCengine, and UltraSPARC are trademarks of SPARC International, Inc
in the United States and other countries. SPARC International, Inc owns all of the SPARC
trademarks and under licensing agreements allows the proper use of these trademarks by
its members.

Many of the designations used by manufacturers and sellers to distinguish their
products are claimed as trademarks. Where those designations appear in this document, and
the FreeBSD Project was aware of the trademark claim, the designations have been followed
by the “™” or the “®” symbol.

During this process, FreeBSD Update may ask the user to help by merging some
configuration files or by confirming that the automatically performed merging was
done correctly.

# freebsd-update install

The system must be rebooted with the newly installed kernel before
continuing.

# shutdown -r now

After rebooting, freebsd-update(8) needs to be run again to
install the new userland components:

# freebsd-update install

At this point, users of systems being upgraded from FreeBSD 7.4-RELEASE or
earlier will be prompted by freebsd-update to rebuild all third-party applications
(e.g., ports installed from the ports tree) due to updates in system
libraries.

After updating installed third-party applications (and again, only if freebsd-update(8) printed a message
indicating that this was necessary), run freebsd-update(8) again so that it can delete the
old (no longer used) system libraries: